Fish Sauce

Fish Sauce Guide: What It Is, How It’s Made, and How to Use It in Cooking

Fish sauce is one of those ingredients that divides people exactly once at the moment they smell it straight from the bottle. After that, almost everyone who keeps cooking with it becomes a convert. The raw smell is funky, pungent, and unmistakably of the sea. What happens when you add it to a hot pan, a marinade, or a vinaigrette is something else entirely: a depth of flavor that's hard to name and harder to replicate with anything else.

This guide covers the full picture how it's made, why it tastes the way it does, how every culture from Thailand to ancient Rome has used fermented fish as a flavor foundation, which brands are worth buying, and what to do when you don't have it.

What Is Fish Sauce?

What Is Fish Sauce

Fish sauce is a liquid seasoning made by fermenting fish most commonly anchovies with a large quantity of salt over an extended period. The salt draws moisture out of the fish, and that liquid, combined with enzymes from the fish's own gut, slowly breaks down the fish proteins into amino acids. The result is a dark amber liquid intensely concentrated in both salinity and umami flavor.

It's not a condiment in the way ketchup or hot sauce is. It's a seasoning ingredient used the way salt is used in Western cooking, but with significantly more flavor complexity. In Thai, Vietnamese, Filipino, and much of Southeast Asian cooking, fish sauce is the default salt source. It does what salt does, and then it does considerably more.

Fish sauce predates recorded recipe history: The Romans produced a fish sauce called garum made from fermented fish entrails that was used so extensively across the Roman Empire that archaeologists have found garum production facilities from Spain to North Africa to modern-day France. Medieval European sauces also incorporated similar fermented fish liquids. The ingredient didn't arrive in Western kitchens as an exotic Asian import, it was always there, just forgotten. Worcestershire sauce, invented in 1837 and still in millions of kitchens, contains fermented anchovies as a primary flavor ingredient.

How Fish Sauce Is Made: The Fermentation Process

The traditional production method hasn't changed meaningfully in thousands of years. Understanding it explains both the smell and the flavor.

Layering fish and salt

Fresh anchovies (or other small oily fish) are layered with sea salt in large wooden barrels or concrete vats. The salt-to-fish ratio is high — typically 3 parts fish to 1 part salt by weight, sometimes higher. The salt does two things immediately: it draws moisture out of the fish via osmosis, and it creates an environment too salty for harmful bacteria to survive. This is what makes fermented fish sauce safe despite having no refrigeration, no pasteurization, and no added preservatives.

Enzymatic fermentation (months to years)

The enzymes naturally present in the fish's gut primarily proteases begin breaking down the fish proteins into free amino acids and peptides. This process is called autolysis. The most flavor-relevant amino acid produced is glutamate, the molecule responsible for umami taste. This is why fish sauce is an umami bomb: it's essentially a concentrated solution of naturally occurring glutamate. The fermentation continues for anywhere from 6 months (budget products) to 2–3 years (premium varieties). Longer fermentation produces more complex, deeper flavor and darker color.

First press (nhĩ / nước mắm nhĩ)

After fermentation is complete, the liquid is drained from the bottom of the barrels without pressing, this is the first-press fish sauce, the highest quality extraction. In Vietnam, this is called nước mắm nhĩ (literally "first drip") and is considered the premium product, reserved for direct table use and the finest cooking. It's cleaner, more nuanced in flavor, and darker amber in color.

Pressing and subsequent extractions

The remaining fish solids are pressed to extract more liquid. Second and third presses produce progressively thinner, lighter, less flavorful sauce. These are typically diluted with water, sometimes enhanced with added salt, sugar, or in lower quality products MSG, caramel coloring, or preservatives. The protein content on the label is the clearest indicator of which press you're getting: higher protein (3–4g per tablespoon) = first press; lower protein (under 1g per tablespoon) = diluted later press.,

Bottling (sometimes sun-aged)

Premium fish sauce is sometimes bottled and then sun-aged in glass bottles before sale — the warmth and UV light further develop color and complexity. Most commercial products are filtered, pasteurized for export stability, and bottled directly. The pasteurization affects the raw smell slightly but not the cooked flavor.

💡 Why does fish sauce smell so strong? The pungent raw smell comes primarily from volatile compounds produced during fermentation: amines, indoles, and short-chain fatty acids, the same compounds responsible for the smell of any aged, fermented protein. These volatile molecules evaporate almost entirely when fish sauce hits a hot pan. The flavor compounds (glutamate, amino acids) are non-volatile and stay in the food. This is why a dish cooked with fish sauce tastes of deep umami complexity, not of fish.

What Does Fish Sauce Taste Like?

Raw, straight from the bottle: intensely salty, with a pungent, funky fermented quality and a distinct briny depth. The smell is stronger than the taste even raw — it hits before you taste it.

What Does Fish Sauce Taste Like

Cooked into a dish: the fishy pungency disappears. What remains is a layer of deep, savory complexity that makes food taste more of itself. It amplifies existing flavors rather than adding a fish flavor. In a stir-fry, a curry, a braise, or a vinaigrette, the fish sauce contribution is felt as richness and depth, not as seafood.

The best quality fish sauce has a hint of nuttiness, a clean finish with minimal aftertaste, and a dark amber-brown color. Lower quality sauce can taste more of salt alone, with less complexity and sometimes a slightly chemical or plastic note from additives.

📌 The umami science: Fish sauce is one of the highest naturally occurring sources of glutamate in any ingredient. A single tablespoon contains enough free glutamate to measurably increase the perception of savory flavor in any dish it's added to. Research published by the Institute of Food Technologists found that replacing standard salt with fish sauce in several dishes reduced sodium content by 10–25% while maintaining or improving the perceived saltiness and overall flavor. This makes it one of the most efficient flavor tools in any kitchen.

Fish Sauce Across Cultures: Every Version Explained

Fish sauce is not a uniquely Thai or Vietnamese ingredient — it's a fermented fish liquid tradition that evolved independently across multiple civilizations that had access to fish and salt. Here's the full picture:

Thailand — Nam Pla (น้ำปลา)

Literally: "fish water"

The most internationally recognized fish sauce. Made primarily from anchovies, clear amber in color, with a moderately assertive flavor that works equally in cooking and at the table. Used in virtually every savory Thai dish — Pad Thai, curries, stir-fries, dipping sauces, salads (larb, som tum). Tiparos, Megachef, and Tra Chang are major Thai brands.

Vietnam — Nước Mắm (nước mắm)

Literally: "liquid from fish"

Considered by many food scholars to be the most refined fish sauce tradition. Phú Quốc island fish sauce — made from black anchovies in barrels for 12–18 months — has protected geographic status similar to Champagne. First-press Vietnamese fish sauce (nước mắm nhĩ) is darker, more complex, and more expensive than standard export varieties. Red Boat is a Vietnamese-origin brand that's become the gold standard internationally.

Philippines — Patis (patis)

By-product of bagoong production

Patis is a by-product of bagoong (fermented fish paste) production — the liquid that rises to the surface as bagoong ferments. Heavier and more assertive in flavor than Thai or Vietnamese varieties. Used to season soups (sinigang), fried chicken marinades, adobo, and as a table condiment alongside rice. Has a distinctly saltier, more mineral-forward flavor profile.

Cambodia — Tuk Trey (ទឹកត្រី)

Literally: "fish water"

Cambodian fish sauce is typically thicker and stronger than Thai varieties, made from freshwater fish (reflecting Cambodia's geography around the Tonle Sap lake) as well as saltwater fish. Used extensively in Khmer cooking — in dipping sauces, soups, and stir-fries. Prahok (fermented fish paste) is the stronger, chunkier variant also central to Cambodian cuisine.

Myanmar — Ngan Bya Yay (ငံပြာရည်)

Less internationally available

Myanmar's fish sauce tradition predates most other regional versions. Made from small fish fermented with salt, it has a particularly strong, pungent flavor used generously in Burmese cooking — in mohinga (rice noodle soup), salads, and stir-fries. Less filtered and more raw-tasting than Thai or Vietnamese equivalents when used at table.

Korea — Aekjeot (액젓)

Essential in kimchi fermentation

Korean fish sauce — made from fermented anchovies or sand lances (kkanari) — is used primarily in kimchi production rather than as a direct cooking sauce. It's added during the kimchi mixing process to accelerate fermentation and add depth of flavor. A subtly different flavor profile from Thai fish sauce — slightly less sharp, with more mineral depth. Available at H-Mart and Korean grocery stores.

Japan — Shottsuru / Ishiru (しょっつる)

Regional artisan products

Japan has several regional fish sauce traditions — shottsuru from Akita (made from sailfin sandfish), ishiru from the Noto Peninsula (sardine and squid), and ikanago shoyu from Kagawa (sand lance). All are niche artisan products used in local nabemono (hot pot) and ramen. Far less commercially available than Thai or Vietnamese varieties, but gaining collector interest among fermentation enthusiasts.

Italy — Colatura di Alici

From the village of Cetara, Campania

The direct descendant of Roman garum. Made in the small coastal village of Cetara from local anchovies fermented in chestnut barrels, colatura is a premium product — expensive, clear amber, and intensely savory. Used sparingly on pasta (spaghetti alle vongole without clams), over bruschetta, or as a finishing seasoning. A direct link between ancient Roman and modern Italian cooking.

Best Brands: Ranked & Reviewed

The brand matters significantly more with fish sauce than with most pantry ingredients. The gap between a first-press premium sauce and a heavily diluted budget product is one of the largest quality differentials in any condiment category.

Red Boat 40°N

Vietnamese origin. Double-fermented, first-press only, zero additives. Two ingredients: black anchovies and sea salt. 4g protein per tablespoon — the highest of any major brand. Clean, complex, faintly nutty flavor with no chemical aftertaste. The benchmark that other premium brands are measured against. Available at H-Mart, Whole Foods, and online in Canada.

Megachef Premium

Thai origin. Also uses only anchovies and salt. Slightly more assertive and saltier than Red Boat — closer to the traditional Thai flavor profile. Excellent for cooking; some find it a touch strong for table use. Widely available at Asian grocery stores in Canada at a lower price point than Red Boat.

Tiparos

Thai origin. One of the most widely available quality brands internationally. Solid protein content (around 2g/tbsp), clean flavor, and consistently produced. The go-to everyday fish sauce for most Thai and Southeast Asian cooks. Excellent value. Available at T&T, H-Mart, and most Asian grocery stores across Canada.

Tra Chang (Balanced Flavor)

Thai origin. Reliable quality, slightly sweeter and more balanced than Tiparos. Good for beginners who find the more assertive brands overwhelming. Available at most Asian grocery stores. One of the most popular brands in Thailand itself.

Three Crabs

Vietnamese-style, produced in Thailand. Lighter color and milder flavor than other brands — often recommended as a beginner's fish sauce. Good for dipping sauces where subtlety is valuable. Protein content is lower (~1g/tbsp) than premium brands. Widely available at Asian grocery stores.

Generic / Store Brand

Most budget fish sauces use multiple extractions heavily diluted with water, with added sugar, salt, MSG, caramel coloring, and preservatives. Protein content is often under 0.5g/tbsp — a reliable indicator of heavy dilution. The flavor is flat, one-dimensional, and can have a chemical aftertaste. Avoid if you can; the price difference between this and Tiparos is small and the quality difference is large.

The label check: Turn the bottle over and read the ingredient list before buying. A good fish sauce contains anchovies (or fish) and salt — nothing else, or at most a small amount of sugar. If you see: hydrolyzed protein, caramel color, MSG, sodium benzoate, or a long list of additives, put it back. The protein content per tablespoon (listed in the nutrition facts) tells you everything: 3–4g = premium first press; 1–2g = mid-range; under 1g = heavily diluted.

How to Read a Fish Sauce Label

What to look for Good sign Bad sign
Ingredient list Anchovies (or fish) + salt only Added water, sugar, MSG, caramel, preservatives
Protein per tbsp 3–4g (premium) / 1–2g (mid-range) Under 1g — indicates heavy dilution with water
Color Dark amber to deep reddish-brown Very pale amber may indicate dilution; very dark near-black may be caramel-colored
Origin Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines for standard cooking; Italy (colatura) for premium finishing Origin alone doesn't determine quality — check ingredients
"First press" / "nhĩ" Indicates highest quality extraction
Nitrogen content (°N) Higher number (30°N, 40°N) = more amino acids = better fermentation Low nitrogen — minimal fermentation, mostly salt water

How to Cook With Fish Sauce: 12 Uses Beyond Asian Food

The most significant shift in how Western cooks use fish sauce over the past decade is the recognition that it belongs well outside Southeast Asian cooking. The flavor logic — adding concentrated umami and depth without adding a detectable "fish" taste — applies anywhere you want a dish to taste more complex and savory.

Pad Thai & Thai stir-fries

The classic use. Fish sauce is the primary salt source — 1–2 tbsp per serving. Add to the pan directly or pre-mix into sauce. The high-heat caramelization transforms the raw smell into deep savory flavor. 

Vietnamese dipping sauce (nuoc cham)

Fish sauce + lime juice + sugar + water + chili + garlic. The essential table condiment for spring rolls, grilled meats, rice noodle bowls, and bánh mì. See the full recipe in the section below.

Caesar dressing

Replace anchovies and part of the Worcestershire sauce with a teaspoon of fish sauce. Produces a cleaner, more uniform umami depth than anchovy paste without any visible fish pieces. A natural fit — Caesar dressing already relies on fermented anchovy flavor.

Pasta sauces (Bolognese, arrabbiata)

Add 1 tsp of fish sauce to tomato-based meat sauces in the early stages of cooking. It amplifies the meatiness of the ground beef and deepens the tomato's natural umami. No one will taste fish; they'll ask why the sauce tastes so good. This is the Italian colatura di alici tradition applied to home cooking.

Roasted vegetables

Toss Brussels sprouts, broccoli, or cauliflower with a mixture of fish sauce, olive oil, and a small amount of honey before roasting. The fish sauce caramelizes during roasting and creates an intensely savory, slightly sticky coating. One of the best uses of fish sauce outside Asian cooking.

Burger patties & meatballs

Replace Worcestershire sauce (which itself contains anchovies) with fish sauce when seasoning ground beef for burgers or meatballs. Ratio: 1 tsp fish sauce per 500g ground beef. The result is a noticeably more complex, savory patty. Works especially well in meatloaf.

Fried rice seasoning

A splash of fish sauce in fried rice instead of (or alongside) soy sauce adds an extra layer of depth that makes the difference between home fried rice and restaurant fried rice. Add it to the hot pan before the rice, not after — the heat transforms it.

Chili & bean dishes

Add 1–2 tsp of fish sauce to chili con carne, black bean soup, or lentil dishes during the simmering stage. It deepens the flavor without adding any perceptible fishiness. The same principle as using anchovies in Italian meat braises — the fish flavor dissolves into background complexity.

How to Cook With Fish Sauce

Bloody Mary cocktail

Replace Worcestershire sauce with fish sauce in a Bloody Mary. Same fermented anchovy flavor base, slightly more direct and complex. A small bar tip that bartenders in Southeast Asia-influenced cocktail bars have been using for years. Start with half the amount you'd use of Worcestershire.

Meat marinades

Fish sauce is an excellent marinade base for grilled chicken, beef, and pork. It's high in sodium (which seasons deep into the meat), and the amino acids act as a tenderizer. Combine with lime juice, garlic, and a small amount of sugar for a versatile Southeast Asian-inspired marinade. Rinse before cooking if worried about the raw smell.

Soup & broth enhancement

A teaspoon of fish sauce added to chicken stock, ramen broth, or vegetable soup deepens the savory base without any discernible fish flavor. The Vietnamese practice of seasoning pho broth with fish sauce follows this exact logic at restaurant scale.

Popcorn seasoning

Drizzle a small amount of fish sauce over hot, freshly popped popcorn and toss immediately. The heat evaporates the pungent volatiles and leaves an intensely savory, slightly caramelized coating. Add a squeeze of lime for the full Southeast Asian street food effect. Unexpectedly excellent.

Every Substitute That Actually Works

Fish sauce has a specific flavor profile — the combination of salinity and fermented umami depth — that is genuinely difficult to replicate fully. But several substitutes get close enough for specific situations.

Substitute Ratio Flavor match Best for
Soy sauce Equal amount Provides saltiness and some umami — misses the fermented complexity and marine quality Everyday cooking when fish sauce isn't available. Adds some color.
Soy sauce + anchovy paste 1 tbsp soy + ½ tsp anchovy paste Closest to authentic. Anchovy paste adds the fermented depth soy alone lacks. Any application where you want the real flavor without a bottle of fish sauce
Worcestershire sauce Equal amount Contains anchovies — provides umami and complexity. Adds molasses sweetness and tartness not in fish sauce. Western dishes (pasta, burgers, stews) where the extra flavor complexity works
Oyster sauce Use ½ the amount + thin with water Thicker, sweeter, less sharp. Good umami depth. Not ideal as direct substitute in most applications. Stir-fries where sweetness is acceptable
Coconut aminos 1.5x the amount of fish sauce called for Milder, sweeter, less salty. Provides umami without fish or soy. Adjust other salt in recipe. Soy-free, paleo, or Whole30 cooking
Tamari + miso paste 1 tbsp tamari + ½ tsp miso per tbsp fish sauce Strong umami from both fermented ingredients. No marine flavor but good depth. Vegan and vegetarian cooking where maximum umami is needed
Seaweed + soy sauce (vegan) 1 tbsp soy + soak with kombu or nori Seaweed provides the marine umami. Closest vegan approximation for dishes where the oceanic quality matters. Vegan Vietnamese and Thai dishes
Table salt Use ¼ to ½ amount Adds saltiness only — completely misses the umami dimension. Last resort. If absolutely nothing else available
The substitute reality check: No single ingredient replaces fish sauce perfectly. The closest you get is anchovy paste combined with soy sauce — but even that lacks the specific fermented depth from the months-long enzymatic process. If you cook Southeast Asian food regularly, fish sauce is worth buying and keeping. It lasts for years, costs a few dollars, and makes a difference no substitute fully replicates.

How to Make Fish Sauce Dipping Sauce

The most important table preparation of fish sauce is the dipping sauce — called nước chấm in Vietnamese and prik nam pla in Thai. It appears on virtually every Vietnamese and Thai table and is used with spring rolls, grilled meats, noodle bowls, rice dishes, and more.

Vietnamese Nuoc Cham (Classic)

Ingredient Amount (for 4 people)
Fish sauce 3 tbsp
Fresh lime juice 3 tbsp
Sugar (white or palm) 2 tbsp
Warm water 4 tbsp
Garlic, finely minced 1–2 cloves
Fresh chili (Thai bird's eye), sliced thin 1–2 chilies (to taste)

Dissolve sugar in warm water first. Add fish sauce, lime juice, garlic, and chili. Stir to combine. Taste — the balance should be simultaneously sweet, sour, salty, and spicy, with no single flavor dominating. Adjust each element a half-teaspoon at a time. Use fresh; best consumed within 1 hour of making. Keeps refrigerated 1 week but citrus flavor fades.

Thai Prik Nam Pla (Chili Fish Sauce)

Simpler and more pungent than nuoc cham — no dilution with water or sugar in the classic version. Thinly sliced Thai bird's eye chilies submerged in fish sauce, sometimes with sliced garlic and a squeeze of lime. Used as a table condiment to add heat and fish sauce flavor to any dish. Every Thai street food stall and restaurant has a jar of this available. Keeps refrigerated 2–3 weeks; the chili flavor intensifies over time.

Korean Kimchi Fish Sauce Brine

Korean fish sauce (aekjeot) is used differently — not as a dipping sauce but mixed directly into the kimchi paste during production along with garlic, ginger, and gochugaru. It accelerates fermentation and adds depth that soy sauce alone doesn't provide. For home kimchi makers: use 2–3 tablespoons of Korean anchovy fish sauce per medium head of Napa cabbage.

How to Make Fish Sauce Dipping Sauce

 

How to Store Fish Sauce & How Long It Lasts

Storage method Duration Notes
Unopened, pantry (cool, dark) Indefinitely / best within 3–4 years The high salt content makes it shelf-stable. Many bottles don't have a best-by date — use the bottling date as a reference.
Opened, pantry Up to 12 months Perfectly acceptable for most fish sauce. Keep the cap tight. Red Boat specifically recommends pantry storage over refrigeration for opened bottles.
Opened, refrigerator Up to 2–3 years Cold slows the slow oxidation of flavor compounds. However, salt may crystallize around the neck and rim — this is harmless, just rinse off. Refrigeration is best for premium brands you use infrequently.
Signs of spoilage Discard if present Mold growth (very rare due to salinity), dramatically changed smell (sour, rotten beyond fermented), or significant color change to black or cloudy. In practice, fish sauce almost never truly spoils — it degrades in quality over time rather than becoming unsafe.
Storage tip: Keep fish sauce away from heat sources and direct sunlight. A pantry shelf or cupboard away from the stove is ideal. Storing next to the stove — where many people keep it — slowly degrades quality from residual heat exposure. For premium bottles you want to maintain at full quality, refrigerate after opening.

Frequently Asked Questions: Fish Sauce

What is fish sauce made of?

Fish sauce is made from two ingredients: fish (most commonly anchovies) and salt. The fish and salt are layered together and fermented for months to years, after which the liquid is pressed off and bottled. Premium fish sauces contain only these two ingredients. Lower quality products add water, sugar, MSG, caramel coloring, and preservatives to dilute the liquid and extend volume.

Does fish sauce taste like fish?

Raw, from the bottle: yes, it has a distinctly funky, fishy, fermented smell and taste. When cooked into a dish at moderate to high heat: no. The volatile compounds responsible for the fishy smell evaporate quickly, leaving behind only the non-volatile flavor compounds — primarily glutamate (umami). A dish cooked with fish sauce does not taste of fish. It tastes savory, deep, and complex.

Is fish sauce the same as oyster sauce?

No. Fish sauce is a thin, clear amber liquid made from fermented fish — used as a seasoning and salt replacement. Oyster sauce is a thick, dark, sweet sauce made from oyster extracts thickened with cornstarch and flavored with sugar and soy sauce — used as a glaze and stir-fry sauce. They have different consistencies, flavor profiles, and uses, though both are condiments in East and Southeast Asian cooking.

Is fish sauce gluten-free?

Yes, in its pure form. Fish sauce made from anchovies and salt contains no gluten. However, some commercial products add wheat-based additives or are produced in facilities that also process gluten-containing products. People with celiac disease should look for certified gluten-free labeling or check directly with the manufacturer. Red Boat and most premium Thai fish sauces are gluten-free.

Can I use fish sauce instead of soy sauce?

Yes, with adjustments. Fish sauce is more intensely flavored and more pungent raw than soy sauce, so use roughly ¾ of the amount a recipe calls for in soy sauce. Fish sauce also lacks soy sauce's characteristic flavor and doesn't add color the same way. In most cooked applications — stir-fries, marinades, sauces — the swap works well. In cold applications (dressings, dipping sauces), the stronger flavor of fish sauce requires more balancing with acid and sweetness.

How much fish sauce should I use?

As a general guide: 1–2 teaspoons as a seasoning addition to soups, stews, and pasta sauces (where it's a background enhancer); 1–2 tablespoons per serving as a primary seasoning in stir-fries and noodle dishes; 3 tablespoons as the salt base in a dipping sauce for 4 people. Always start with less and add more — fish sauce is easier to add than to balance out if you've used too much.

Does fish sauce go bad?

Rarely in a safety sense. The high salt concentration creates an environment hostile to harmful bacteria — fish sauce almost never becomes unsafe. What it does is degrade in quality over time: the color darkens, the flavor becomes flatter and more one-dimensional, and some of the nuance is lost. An opened bottle kept in the pantry is best used within a year; refrigerated, it maintains quality for 2–3 years. Discard if you see visible mold (extremely rare) or if the smell has dramatically changed beyond the normal fermented pungency.

What is the difference between Thai and Vietnamese fish sauce?

Both are made from anchovies and salt, but there are meaningful differences. Vietnamese fish sauce (nước mắm) — especially the premium Phú Quốc variety — tends to be darker, more intensely flavored, and more complex, reflecting longer fermentation and first-press extraction. Thai fish sauce (nam pla) is generally lighter in color, slightly less intense, and more commonly used directly in cooking. Vietnamese fish sauce is often preferred for dipping sauces and raw applications; Thai fish sauce works seamlessly in all cooked dishes. Both are interchangeable in most recipes.

Conclusion

Fish sauce is the most misunderstood ingredient in most Western kitchens. The bottle smells alarming. The ingredient name triggers skepticism. And then you cook with it once and understand immediately why half the world has been putting fermented fish in their food for thousands of years.

The flavor logic is simple: anywhere you want depth, savory complexity, or a better version of whatever you're already salting, fish sauce delivers. It doesn't taste like fish in a cooked dish. It tastes like the dish is better. That's the entire case for keeping a bottle in your pantry and once you've tasted the difference between Red Boat and a cheap budget brand, you'll understand why the label matters.

Buy Tiparos or Megachef for everyday cooking. Buy Red Boat when quality counts. Check the ingredient list every time. Everything else follows from there.

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